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You are here: BAILII >> Databases >> United Kingdom Employment Appeal Tribunal >> Cheasty v. H. M. Prison Service [2003] UKEAT 1142_02_1909 (19 September 2003) URL: http://www.bailii.org/uk/cases/UKEAT/2003/1142_02_1909.html Cite as: [2003] UKEAT 1142_02_1909, [2003] UKEAT 1142_2_1909 |
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At the Tribunal | |
Before
HIS HONOUR JUDGE D SEROTA QC
PROFESSOR P D WICKENS OBE
MS P TATLOW
APPELLANT | |
RESPONDENT |
Transcript of Proceedings
JUDGMENT
Revised 5 November 2003
For the Appellant | MR PETER WARD (of Counsel) Instructed by: Messrs Levenes Solicitors Ashley House 235-239 High Road Wood Green London N22 8HF |
For the Respondent | MR PAUL GOTT (of Counsel) Instructed by: The Treasury Solicitor Queen Anne's Chambers 28 Broadway London SW1H 9JS |
HIS HONOUR JUDGE D SEROTA QC
55 "From about July 2001 onwards, he has had a recognised psychiatric disorder.
…
60 It is my view that the moderate depressive episode of December 99 – January 2000 probably impaired his ability to concentrate and therefore certain aspects of memory, but only briefly. With regard to 2001, if the Court finds evidence that it is true that Mr Cheasty's work performance was reduced in quality or output, then what caused it? On the balance of probabilities, it was increasing stress and anxiety, leading up to going off work on 9.7.01, and on the balance of probabilities, this increasing anxiety and stress while at work would have impaired his concentration, and thereby secondarily his memory to some extent. Was that extent substantial? It is my view that it was substantial as defined in the guidelines in the DDA, in terms of meaning more than minor, and leading to prolongation of time required to carry out the activity of writing Lifer Board reports, but it probably did not significantly affect day-to-day activities at home.
…
64 I have been asked to consider the cumulative effect of the disability. The cumulative effect of his perceived difficulties has contributed to his current psychiatric distress, but I do not think that there is a cumulative effect with regard to the impairment of concentration and memory.
65 I have been asked to consider whether the impairment is long term, i.e. it has, or is likely to last at least 12 months at the relevant date. Mr Cheasty was impaired from about December 1999 to January 2000. Mr Cheasty was then impaired probably from about June 2001, through to the present, which is almost one year.
…
67 I am aware that Mr Cheasty does not like psychotropic medication and fears dependence on it, but he did take antidepressants in December 1999 with benefit. Although he perceived continuing work difficulties and reported continuing distress, he did not have a recognised psychiatric disorder in 2000 and probably not for several months into 2001. Had he received psychiatric medication when the GP gave him a certificate to be off work in July 2001, on the balance of probabilities his symptoms would have diminished, and he would have been able to return to work and function better, and on the balance of probabilities, while on antidepressant medication, his concentration and memory would have been the better, allowing a better work performance, and removing him from the level of disability within the meaning of the DDA 1995.
…
69 Were he to accept cognitive behaviour therapy immediately, he would improve within 8 weeks, and would be capable of any form of work for which he was trained. He might feel anxious returning to Wormwood Scrubs because of the history of perceived work difficulties there. It should be recognised that his current psychiatric state has a good outcome, with appropriate treatment, and a particularly good outcome were he to return to a supportive work setting."
"We hereby place you on notice that we shall be raising objections to the relevance of the documentation and the witness statements served unless you are able to fully explain their relevance. At the same time we shall be seeking to recover the costs of having to consider this further information from your Client."
"The statements and documents which I have served deal with wider matters than those which will be before the Tribunal on 15 August. However, I am not prepared to limit the consideration which I will give to such statements and documents when I prepare for that hearing."
18 "…it really began sometime after 17 July 2001 when Mr Cheasty was due to return to work following the birth of his second child and a period of paternity/annual leave."
18 "We therefore take the view that if the question of disability were put to an objective and informed observer in July/August 2001, as to whether it was likely that Mr Cheasty's mental impairment was likely to last for more than 12 months, we conclude the answer, based on the medical and other evidence now before us, would be 'no'."
19 "Apart from forgetfulness as to matters of shopping, mislaying his keys and leaving doors open, there was nothing in the evidence to indicate that in the home environment Mr Cheasty had any problems beyond the minor or trivial in terms of his ability to carry out day-to-day activities."
"The Tribunal should consider whether the impairment has a substantial and long term adverse effect on the employee's ability to perform normal day to day activities both while actually at work and while not at work. 'Normal day to day activities' are only a yardstick for deciding whether an impairment is serious enough to qualify for protection under the Act. In assessing whether a disability has a substantial and long term effect on the ability to do everyday tasks, it is not appropriate to confine the evaluation to the extent to which the Applicant's symptoms are such as to have a significant and long term effect on his ability to perform day to day tasks, such symptoms are not to be ignored simply because the work itself may be specialised and unusual, so long as the disability and its consequences can be measured in terms of the ability of an Applicant to undertake day to day tasks…in order to determine that if the impairment amounts to a disability the Tribunal shall ask whether there was a substantial and long term adverse effect while the employee was still in employment."
20 "He has told us that he has difficulty in completing the lifer report which require him to interview prisoners who are themselves difficult and possibly dangerous individuals, preparing a written report and making recommendations which can have a serious impact on the prisoner and on society as a whole. We had no evidence that the other more mundane tasks undertaken by Mr Cheasty caused him difficulty, but this "specialist and highly sophisticated activity of writing lifer reports seemed to be the main issue of concern to Mr Cheasty…From the evidence before us we found no other examples of such an inability to undertake day to day tasks at work, as to come within the requirements of the Act."
21 "We do not ignore that evidence but looking carefully at Dr Jacobson's report, we find his opinion is hedged round with qualifications and reservations to Mr Cheasty's mental condition."
21 "Those observations seemed to us to be less than confident in Dr Jacobson's conclusion as to whether or not Mr Cheasty comes within the definition of section 1 DDA. Dr Jacobson asks the question – if the reduction in work performance was not due to the depressive illness, what was the reason for it? As regards the episode in 1999/2000, it seems clear that there is a correlation between the onset of that episode and the consequences of the complaint of racism made against Mr Cheasty by Ms Herbert-Richards. As to the absence from work from June 2001 onwards, we note that Mr Cheasty's wife has had another child, that he felt pressured by the demands made of him by the Prison Service to complete the lifer reports, plus the change in his office environment all contributed to his state of mind. For these reasons, while respecting the conclusions reached by Dr Jacobson, we consider on the balance of probabilities, taking into account all the evidence which has been put before us today, and having heard the detailed submissions of the representatives of both parties, that on balance Mr Cheasty's condition was not such as to constitute a substantial and long term adverse effect in his employment. He is therefore not a disabled person within the meaning of section 1 DDA."
1 (1) "Subject to the provisions of Schedule 1, a person has a disability for the purposes of this act if he has a physical or mental impairment which has a substantial and long term adverse effect on his ability to carry out normal day-to-day activities."
A disabled person is defined in sub-section 2 as "a person who has a disability".
6 (6) "Nothing in this section imposes any duty on an employer in relation to a disabled person if the employer does not know, and could not reasonably be expected to know –
(a) in the case of an applicant or potential applicant, that the disabled person concerned is, or may be, an applicant for the employment; or
(b) in any case, that that person has a disability and is likely to be affected in the way mentioned in subsection (1)."
2 (1) "The effect of an impairment is a long-term effect if –
(a) it has lasted at least 12 months;
(b) the period for which it lasts is likely to be at least 12 months;
…
(2) Where an impairment ceases to have a substantial adverse effect on a person's ability to carry out normal day-to-day activities, it is to be treated as continuing to have that effect if that effect is likely to recur."
24 "We do not preclude the possibility that a Tribunal may, for good reason, reject uncontradicted medical evidence. However that is not what happened here. The majority simply disregarded the medical evidence. That, in our view, is wholly impermissible."
"25 It seems to us that a claim against an employer for breach of duty under these sections must involve an examination of the actions of the employer towards the employee at the time. The person must be shown to be disabled. To make sense of this process must of necessity mean looking at the disabled person at the time of the actions complained of. Section 1 is simply a definition section that provides the meaning to attach to disability where it arises in the many parts of the Act. The fact that it uses the present tense does not alter the meaning of ss.4 and 5, but rather it provides the meaning of the word to be applied in the context of those sections. What is being asked is whether 'an employer discriminates against a disabled person ...' To answer that question requires an examination of how the employer treated the employee as he was at that time. Was he then disabled as defined in s.l ? This is confirmed, on an examination of other provisions of the Act. For instance, in s.6, which imposes on an employer an obligation to make reasonable adjustments, subsection 6 provides:
'Nothing in this section imposes any duty on an employer in relation to a disabled person if the employer does not know, and could not reasonably be expected to know- ...
(b) ...that that person has a disability.'
That which requires examination is that which was, or should have been, in the mind of the employer at the time, and that must require an examination of whether there was a disability at that time. Indeed, in s.l itself, subsection (4) provides:
'... the question whether a person had a disability at a particular time ("the relevant time") shall be deter- mined, for the purposes of this section, as if the provisions of, or made under, this Act in force when the act complained of was done had been in force at the relevant time.'
Here again the Act seems to require any examination of whether there was a disability, to involve examination of the employee's impairment at the time of the act complained of, in this case the dismissal.
…
28 (c) 'Normal day-to-day activities' in s.l are included, it seems us, as a way of deciding whether the impairment is serious enough to qualify for protection under the Act. They are there as a yardstick, but only as a yardstick. It follows that in assessing whether a disability has a significant and long-term effect on the ability to do everyday tasks, it is not appropriate to confine the evaluation to the extent to which the applicant is disabled only in a 'normal day-to-day' environment. In this case when the appellant is away from work he can obviously accomplish most everyday tasks, on the findings of the employment tribunal. But the position of the 'everyday tasks' test is as a measure of seriousness, it is not dictating the actual environment in the particular case in which such symptoms are to be judged. Accordingly if, whilst at work, an applicant's symptoms are such as to have a significant and long-term effect on his ability to perform day-to-day tasks, such symptoms are not to be ignored simply because the work itself may be specialised and unusual, so long as the disability and its consequences can be measured in terms of the ability of an applicant to undertake day-to-day tasks. The Act is not restricted to the period when people who are only doing day-to-day activities; those activities are rather a 'barometer' or test of the degree of severity of the impairment."
17 "The particular duties performed by an employee in the course of his or her work cannot, of course, be equated with normal day-to-day activities. Each case will depend on its own circumstances but the work performed by an employee may well include some normal day-to-day activities."
30 "Where treatment has ceased the effects of that treatment should be taken into account in order to assess the disability. This is the case because para. 6 of Schedule 1 applies only to continuing medical treatment, i.e. to measures that 'are being taken' and not to concluded treatment where the effects of such treatment may be more readily ascertained." [our underlining]
We do not consider, therefore, that medical treatment recommended, but not taken up, should be disregarded.
"Inability to concentrate on a task requiring application over several hours. Inability to fill in a long detailed technical document without assistance."